The back end of Tampa Bay’s defense currently looks like this: Goldson and Mark Barron will play the safety positions and create one of the top tandems in the NFL. Revis will play on one side of the field with Eric Wright on the other.

If Revis fully recovers from his October ACL surgery, he could return to form as the NFL’s top corner and give Tampa Bay the Florida Gulf Coast version of Revis Island. Revis will match up well with any of the No. 1 receivers on the Buccaneers' schedule.

But Wright is going to get abused on the opposite side unless Tampa Bay does something else to upgrade its secondary.

Wright was ranked No. 83 in the NFL by Pro Football Focus in their advanced metric that measures the amount of times a cornerback gives up a reception in correlation with how many snaps he’s in coverage. Wright gave up a reception last year for every 8.9 times he is in coverage. The top 20 cornerbacks in the league ranged from a reception every 12 snaps to almost 17 snaps.

Wright played in just 10 games last season after being suspended for four games for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy. He was targeted 56 times by opposing quarterbacks and gave up 35 receptions for 510 yards. Wright picked off one pass and gave up two touchdowns.

It doesn’t matter how good Revis is on one side of the field. He’ll shut down one receiver just like everyone knows he can. But if a team has a quality second receiver, Tampa Bay is still going to bleed yardage through the air.